Somali Christians facing persecution hope for sanctuary in U.S.

Iftin Aden (left), Joseph Osman and Joel Aden (right), meet for a home fellowship at Aden’s house in Nairobi Feb. 2, 2017. The group meets here to worship for fear of persecution. (Lilian Odhiambo, GPJ Kenya)

By Lilian Odhiambo

NAIROBI, KENYA — First, Joel Aden was a refugee from Somalia, a country ravaged with ongoing violence. Then, he became a refugee from the Somali refugee community in Kenya.

Seventeen years as a Somali Christian have left Aden, 28, with physical and emotional scars. His family rejected him. He worships God in secret.

But when U.S. President Donald Trump issued a travel ban for seven countries, including Somalia, the couple saw hope in one of Trump’s statements that said persecuted Christians would take priority in resettlement.

Trump’s executive order sparked a roller-coaster week for many refugees who faced uncertainty over their immediate and long-term futures. The order was blocked through a series of court decisions in the days after it was issued, but a new order, released in early March, announced a temporary ban on citizens of six countries, including Somalia. It did not prioritize the resettlement of persecuted Christians. That regulation, too, was blocked, but it’s not clear whether Trump will continue to pursue similar policies.

That uncertainty leaves Aden; his wife, Iftin Aden, a Kenyan; and the couple’s three children in limbo. They’re desperate to leave Kenya, a country where they say they’re persecuted by other Somalis because Joel Aden converted to Christianity. Trump has said Christians like Aden should be resettled for their safety. But as a Somali, Aden is considered a potential terrorist threat.

Even as the U.S. border tightens, it’s still a favored destination for Somalis who are fleeing their country to escape violence and poverty. Neighboring Kenya has long been a natural destination, but now the Kenyan government wants to close the massive refugee camps that house many of those Somalis. The number of Somalis in Kenya has gone down in recent years, but many people remain.

In 2013, there were nearly half a million registered Somali refugees in Kenya, but by January there were 324,735, according to data from United Nations High Commission for Refugees. That decrease came after the two countries, along with UNHCR, signed an agreement that set guidelines to allow Somali refugees to safely return home.

A Kenyan government plan to close Dadaab refugee camp, where most Somali refugees live, was thwarted in February when Kenya’s High Court ruled that the action would be discriminatory, and therefore unconstitutional. That ruling temporarily eased fears for Somali refugees who haven’t voluntarily left Kenya, but Kenyan government officials indicated that they would appeal the ruling.

“The government has no responsibility to strain so much to deploy security resources of the Kenyan taxpayer maintaining a refugee camp of that magnitude,” Eric Kiraithe, a government spokesman, said in a press conference held the day of the court ruling.

The U.S. has accepted just over 100,000 Somali refugees for resettlement since 2002, according to the U.S. State Department’s Refugee Processing Center. Fewer than 400 of those Somali refugees identified themselves as Christian.

As Somali refugees’ options threaten to narrow, Aden remains hopeful that his family’s faith will open a door for immigration to the U.S., even though he’s been given no indication by UNHCR or any other organization that, as Christians, their case will be prioritized once the ban on Somali immigration ends.

Aden was a toddler when his family fled Mogadishu, Somalia’s capital, and settled in Garissa, a city in eastern Kenya. That was in 1991. In 1999, Aden, suffering from intense vomiting and a skin rash, was admitted to a hospital, where a Christian pastor prayed for him.

“I felt something different,” Aden says. “I wanted to know more about the power that the man used in order for me to feel the relief that I felt.”

Aden’s parents bitterly opposed his conversion to Christianity. Eventually, he left home for Eastleigh, a Somali-majority neighborhood in Nairobi. But even there, he was violently attacked, he says, and even poisoned.

“At this point, I knew I was suffering and faced rejection just because of my salvation,” he says. “But I knew that I was in the right place.”

Aden might have been in the right place spiritually, but his geographic location was dangerous. One night in 2014, two men joined Aden and a friend in a discussion about Christianity. The discussion turned into an argument. One man pulled a knife and slashed Aden’s stomach. He stayed at Kenyatta National Hospital for two weeks. A criminal case is ongoing.

Other Somali Christians say they’ve faced violence, too.

Katra Mohammed, 20, left Mogadishu in 2007, after she returned home from a madrassa, a local Islamic school, to find her house burned down in a spate of random violence. Neighbors found her and took her with them to Nairobi. Mohammed found a housekeeping job and someone in that household told her about Christianity.

“We would secretly study the Bible together,” Mohammed says.

That friend has since resettled in the U.S. as a refugee, she says.

Trouble followed Mohammed’s conversion. A group of men attacked her as she left church one day, and her injuries sent her to a hospital. The family that brought her from Somalia to Kenya still hunts her, she says. They’re angry that she converted to Christianity.

Mohammed and her husband, a Congolese Christian she met at a church in Kenya, have lately avoided church for fear of persecution. When they do worship, they do it with other former Muslims who share their concern for secrecy. Even the covers of their Bibles are designed to appear similar to the Quran, the Muslim holy book, to thwart the attention of a potentially hostile person.

“It feels like double trouble for me,” Mohammed says. “Now I left our home many years ago, thinking that I was escaping the war there, only to be persecuted here for choosing the religion that I wanted.”

Andrew Maina, a spokesman for the Refugee Consortium of Kenya, says his organization hasn’t handled any cases of Christian Somalis being persecuted by Muslim Somalis, but notes that he is aware that arrests have been made in such cases.

For Mohammed, the U.S. is an earthly promised land, even though its borders are, for now, closed to her.

“Since I became a Christian, I have always wanted to go to the U.S. since I know there is freedom,” Mohammed says. “I know of friends who have managed to go to the U.S. and they are living a good life. I see my friend who went to the U.S. freely posting on social media about her Christian status. I wish I could do so.”

5 Comments

This story contains a number of errors. I contacted GPJ concerning this story a while ago but never received a response.

The three people identified as Iftin Aden, Joseph Osman, and Joel Aden are all Kenyan citizens, not refugees from Somalia. As such, they are not eligible for resettlement in the USA. Joseph and Joel are ethnic Somalis and have converted from Islam to Christianity, while Joel’s wife Iftin is an ethnic Kikuyu who was born and raised a Christian.

Iftin, Joseph, and Joel’s real names are Peris, Abdirahman, and Mohamed, respectively. It is well known among the community of Somali converts in Nairobi that these three people are running a scam, pretending to be persecuted in order to get financial donations from churches and Christian organizations.

The incident in 2014 that left Joel/Mohamed hospitalized is also well known among the community in Nairobi. He did not receive a knife wound in his stomach, but jumped out of the window in an intoxicated state. In the aftermath, he accused his friend of pushing him out of the window and had him imprisoned and tortured in an attempt to extort money. His friend Joseph/Abdirahman actively helped him in this scheme. The details of this case can be verified at Pangani police station in Eastleigh.

Mohamed and his friends would never agree to have their pictures published on the internet if they were really persecuted for their faith. News websites that publish their stories are enabling these criminals. I respectfully request that you take down the article until you can verify the story.

Thanks Pastor Mike for recommending these three people who claims that they get persecuted. I know Abdiraxman very well. What you have said is valid and true. I do not know you and I do not want to say negative thing to these three people.

In fact, they never use these English names when I was in Nairobi with them and I think the problem is the western mission who are creating dependency and not supporting somali believers to stand with their feet.